The Late Hermit Lord of Validurm
by Arcie Emm
Seeing him trudge home along the barely existent path, his tattered,
brown robe trailing in the dust, it would be easy to assume that he had
failed in his declared mission. That assumption was correct, Learic, the
second son of Emperor Burthin had been no more willing to listen to his
entreaties of peace than he had been willing to listen to those of
Madorn, or neighboring Samendolia, whose territory had shrunk
significantly after the arrival of the invaders. Nor had he expected the
prince too, why would Learic listen to the voice of a tired old man, when
he had ignored the ambassadors of countries so much greater than his own.
After all, when the now tired old man had been younger, he would not have
listened, had not listened.
So impossible peace had never been his true mission, but now he feared
that in that too he would he fail. He worried that the imbecile, sitting
on his fancy throne, would be too dense to see beyond his last words.
Learic probably only heard the threat in which they were couched,
something entirely possible, for the old man worried he had probably gone
overboard in his final speech. Still, even now, as he remembered it, he
found himself smiling.
"Hear me Learic, Accursed Son of the Emperor Burthin, Despoiler of Fair
Madorn and invader of Peaceful Samendolia. Fear me Learic, ill-begotten
spawn of the Empress of Goscaire's accursed womb. Hear me. Fear me. Know
that I, Anders Welsodon, the Hermit Lord of Validurm, am your bane. Know
that I swear by all that is good and right to end your evil, returning
you to the deepest hells from which you sprung. Know that I will lead my
people against you, that they shall never bow their knee while I yet draw
breath into my body. Hear me Learic. Fear me Learic. Know me for your
doom."
Yes, it had definitely been too much, but then he had always had a
weakness for the dramatic, the theatrical. Thus he had lifted his speech,
almost word for word, from a play that he had loved as a youth, one long
since forgotten by all but himself. It had not been a good choice, he had
seen how tempted the prince had been to call for his death. Fortunately
he was not sunk so deeply into folly as to willfully kill an ambassador,
no matter how seriously that ambassador pressed his luck.
Now he wondered if the prince, or any of his counselors saw the out he
offered? Or had he walked these long leagues to no avail?
Feeling the slight tremor from the ground upon which he walked, he
received his desired answer. Yet the only victory in that knowledge was
to provide a reason to stop walking, to give into the tired old man he
appeared to be. Turning in the direction, from which he had come, he
watched their approach, satisfied that rather than some motley squad of
regulars, his death was to be delivered by a company of elite bodyguards.
Mounted upon matching chestnuts, they were not as exotically dressed as
some he had seen in the enemy camp. No helms shaped like the heads of
animals nor did they carry weapons that only the largest of men could
wield, instead they wore plain helms, plumed to matched the surcoats and
cloaks of green, upon which danced a symbol of red flame, over their
fine, steel chain mail. They exuded a professional competence that he
admired, leading him to wonder to which of Learic's captains they
belonged.
As they thundered to a stop before him, he saw they had no need to look
outlandish, leaving it to their leader, the Sorceress Feraleen of
Goscaire, who was the most exotic of all of Learic's captains. Though at
this moment, sitting side-saddle in her green, velvet riding habit, a
ribbon of like material fastening long, red hair into a ponytail beneath
a jaunty, feathered cap, she seemed to be a normal, well-bred lady out
for a ride. He saw nothing of the vixen who had worn no more than a
filigreed, gold bandeau and matching belt-like skirt as she had lazed on
cushions at the feet of the prince, watching him with fiery green eyes.
Her own captain, leaping from his horse, scurried over to lift her down
from her mount. Yet he did not move to follow her as she approached the
brown clad figure, her swaying saunter and saucy manner in which she
removed her gloves giving lie to the demure nature of her dress.
"Do you know how close the folly of your final speech came to bringing
ruination upon your plan, Hermit Lord?"
"Aye, Lady Feraleen, I do."
"I believe you. For one who would take the entire enmity, of my lord,
upon his own head, willing to sacrifice himself, thus providing his
people the option of honourable surrender, without him to lead them,
would know how useless such a sacrifice would be if it came under a flag
of truce."
Nodding his head in agreement, he said, "Well reasoned."
In answer, she offered a smile and a mocking curtsey.
That smile undid him. Not that he broke down in tears, crying mercy, and
falling to his knees. Instead it burned away the constraints in which he
had chained himself, through decades of solitude and meditation. His true
self unbound, he realized that it was not in his nature to willingly
sacrifice himself for anybody's betterment. Life was precious to him, at
least his own. Not that, now that he thought about, the existence he had
been living was a worthy to be called life for one such as he. Instead of
attempting to play shrinking violet before that idiotic pup on his
throne, he should have sent him to bed in a cold grave and taken this
bewitching temptress as his own. Now it was too late. Rather than warm
his bed, she was here to kill him and that he could no longer allow.
Somehow she noticed the change in his demeanor, maybe saw it in the eyes,
which rarely could hide the truth from those practiced in the deception
of magic. Frowning she asked, "How do you wish your sacrifice to proceed,
Hermit Lord?"
"Actually, Lady Feraleen, I think I have changed my mind."
"What is this, Hermit Lord? Do your knees now grow weak at what you have
set in motion? Do you forsake your noble goal to save your people? Were
your brave taunts of my lord, only those of a coward protected by the
rules of diplomacy?"
"Aye, all of which you accuse holds some of the truth, but not all of it.
You ignore all that I have to lose; to never feel the warmth of the sun
on my face, to never be again bedazzled by a beautiful woman's smile, to
never again play the games we humans play. This and more I would lose, if
I followed through with my mad plan. I can deny myself no longer."
"We both know it is too late to return the wine into the bottle from
which it was poured. Again I offer you choice. Shall my men fill you with
arrows? Or will you bow your head to my Captain's blade?"
"Ah, if you only knew the trouble I have found myself in, always being
unwilling to bow my neck to anyone."
"Arrows it is." She answered, pitching her voice louder.
Her men reacted instantly to the words. Bows, which were already
stringed, soon had arrows knocked, then in a seemingly orchestrated
motion they aimed and loosed those arrows. However, before they could
rain down in his death, the Hermit Lord made a gesture and murmured a
word, causing Feraleen to flinch aside as she felt a rush of great power,
like a desert wind passing her by. Startled, she saw a crystal dome form
over the two of them, shielding him from the arrows and her from her
bodyguard, who leapt forward in worry, though neither they nor their
shouts reached her.
"I thought it would be best if we did not muck up your fine fellows while
we settle this matter. Don't you agree?"
Spinning back to the brown-robed figure, she worked to bring surprise in
check, before saying, "So the rumours are true, you're a magician."
"I have dabbled."
"What is your school?"
"School? Oh no, I never confined myself to one area of study."
Instantly her arrogance returned. Wariness replaced by the contempt of a
specialist when encountering a generalist, the disdain of an aggressor
that he had reacted defensively, even with the advantage of surprise on
his side. "Well I practice demonology."
"Of course you do."
Her eyes blazing at the implied mockery, she began an incantation.
Resulting in a burst of lava, from which arose a monstrous figure,
looking like some ancient stone statue of a knight, its horned helm
scraped the roof of the dome, which had expanded to accept its new
inhabitant. The beast looked questioningly at her, baleful eyes glowing
through slits in its helm.
Pointing to her opponent, she said, "Slay me this vermin."
From scabbard or hook it took a great weapon into each hand; a sword, a
lochabar axe, a barbed whip, and a spiked morning star. Turning to its
prey, it lumbered forward a step, but then it stopped as if startled,
crashing suddenly to its knees and face, to grovel on the ground.
Stunned, she shrieked, "What are you doing you lummox? Get up and do my
will."
"What do you think your erentian sees, to make it act so?" Her opponent
lazily asked.
Ignoring him, she stepped for to kick the monster, hardly feeling the
stubbed toe as she exhorted it to do her bidding.
"The poor thing seems out of its wits with fear, maybe if you speak to it
in its own language it would be more likely to respond. For I heard they
don`t properly understand ours, only responding to gestures that mesh
with its desires to kill."
Almost snarling, her rage robbing some of her beauty, she responded with
a hiss. "I do not speak its language, you doddering old fool."
"You don't? My how delinquent of your instructors. Well I guess it is up
to me. Ochk il baur velnic Baurdinan?"
Not looking up, the monster rumbled its response. "Desamnble Fralen
Meurtin, ba kodf syr pled hi gos baur. Fasa, il syr hellin bau."
"Allow me to translate, it said 'Great Lord Meurtin, I did not know it
was you. Please, do not destroy me.' How curious, what do you think it
means?"
Feraleen's face grew even paler than normal at these words. It was almost
in a whisper that she said, "Great Lord Meurtin? It was Master Meurtin
who founded our school, but he has been dead for centuries. Why..."
Her voicing trailing off, he finished her question for her, "Why does
your erentian think I am the dead founder of the Academy of Demonology in
Goscaire?"
Fearfully she asked, "Yes?"
His face lost its grand-fatherly smile, replaced instead by one of
ancient wickedness, as he continued to toy with her. "Maybe the creature
is mad? Why else would it accuse me, Anders Welsodon, Hermit Lord of
Validurm, of being Siglindel Meurtin, son of Issingle and Manfuerd
Meurtin. Next thing you know it will be calling me Ashide the
Necromancer, Dinal of Falinquin, or maybe even Fruderick Vontonel of lost
Dissidel."
No longer did Feraleen of Goscaire look at him with saucy superiority.
Instead that had disappeared behind the fear that grew greater with every
terrible name he conjured from the past.
"Maybe it will even accuse me of being Feraleen of Goscaire?"
It took her a moment to realize that this time she did not hear his
words, instead they reverberated in her mind. She screamed.
They always screamed at this point, thought the last Mind Master of
Dissidel. Even the late Hermit Lord of Validurm had screamed, and Anders
Welsodon had been more at peace with himself, readier for death than any
of his prior victims. Which was why Fruderick Vontonel had chosen him,
hoping to quench his own fires in the man's purity.
He spared a thought as to how close he had come to intentionally losing
himself. But only a single thought. Distractions and memories of his own
past were hindrances as he rummage through the memories of Feraleen's
past. He needed to work quickly to understand her essence, her past. Nor
did he have time to feel pity for the abuses that had led her into his
clutches, not that pity was ever an emotion he nourished. He ferreted out
her secrets, her fears, her dreams, her very being. And when he had taken
all that she had to give, he raced to her centre, where a green flame
anxiously flickered. Then, as casually as a child tasked with putting
away the supper tables candles, he snuffed out the flame.
Feraleen of Goscaire was dead.
Instantaneously, in place of the green flame, a white one flared.
Brighter, stronger, it denoted new ownership. Once more, a Feraleen of
Goscaire was alive and she had duties to perform before she could
collapse into needed slumber.
Speaking, in the language of demons, she said, "Get up Soldier and slay
the Hermit Lord for me."
From its belly, it rose to its knees, looking from the brown robed man to
the green dressed woman, finally it settled its gaze upon the woman and
in confusion asked, "Master?"
"Mistress now, apparently. Do my will Soldier, slay that useless carcass,
so that its death can bring success to my earlier plan. Then I can search
for a new goal."
Growling agreement, it clambered to its feet. Taking two long strides it
swung its sword and brought an end to the body, which now lacked the
awareness to know it was finished. Crumpling to the ground, its death
caused both the demon and the crystal dome to disappear, allowing the
cheering men of Feraleen's guard to rush towards their mistress as she
smiled, apparently in victory. They had no way of knowing that her
amusement sprung from the knowledge that being who she had become, so
very different than anybody she had ever been before, it would be
perfectly acceptable to dramatically feint, falling into the arms of her
onrushing captain.
So she did.
***
Angry shouts brought Feraleen awake, finding herself to be gently rocking
in a make-shift litter of green cloaks, strung between two horses. Shouts
that exasperated the throbbing in her head, which always followed the
possession of a new host, as centuries of memories, experiences, and
knowledge flowed into unused portions of the new brain, finding residence
wherever each may. And just like exercising muscles never used, the
result caused pain that could only be combated by time. But first she
needed to find the cause of and end the shouting. Tentatively, finding it
difficult to find purchase in her hammock like bed, she tried to sit up.
Frustrated in that effort she began to listen the ruckus.
It seemed to be an argument between voices which were familiar, but that
she could not yet recognize. It was always thus, every mind processed
information differently, requiring her to find her way along its pathways
and slowing her reaction to those who she should know. Fortunately it was
something that could be explained away by the exhaustion and headache,
during which she familiarized herself with a new shell.
"Thrice cursed fool, what madness possessed you to allow her to leave the
camp?"
Loud and angry, cultured and cruel, even fearful to a degree, she took in
all these clues from the man's question and found him within her new
memories, sure that the hazy figure in her mind would become real as soon
as she set eyes upon him. Duke Blaise Tormaer, who wore of many hats.
Some were official, such as; Duke of Solden Valley, Son of Arch-Duke
Dorthon, Nephew of Emperor Burthin, Cousin to Learic, and Commander of
the two regiments of the Imperial Guard accompanying the army. But it was
the unofficial roles, implied or whispered behind closed doors that made
him such an intriguing and feared personage; maybe an explorer,
adventurer, spy, adulterer, murderer, but definitely the throne's chief
problem solver.
"Forgive me, My Lord, but I do not command milady's steps. I follow in
hers."
This voice she found even easier, having fallen into his arms moments
after rebirth. Captain Abnar Deloiut had been gifted to her, along with
his company, by Learic after she had become his concubine. Loyal,
competent, professional, and more than a bit in love with her, worthy of
her trust. But she also knew how ill-suited he was to match wits with the
duke.
"So you merrily follow her into enemy territory to confront a powerful
wizard on his own grounds."
"A wizard she easily defeated. You should have seen her, Duke Tormaer,
commanding her mighty demon to tear him apart."
"Spare me your misbegotten pride, you imbecile. Think what would have
happened to you if that had not been the case? My cousin would have had
your skin flayed from your bones and used for a drumhead."
"Nothing would have happened to Lady Feraleen while my men and I drew
breath."
In response, she heard a hissing sound, a snap, and a man's shout.
Realizing her captain had just felt the sting of Duke Tormaer's scourge,
she decided it was time to make her presence known. In a querulous tone,
she asked, "What's going on?"
Two faces appeared above her, the bearded one bearing three cuts across
his face and clean shaven, handsome man. It was he that spoke. "Lady
Feraleen, how good of you rejoin us. Your Captain Deloiut was just
telling me how you single-handedly defeated the Hermit Lord of Validurm.
Brava, Lady, brava."
"Duke Tormaer?"
"Yes it is I. Apparently slower of wit than Your Loveliness. For by the
time I discerned the true offer behind King Welsodon's words, you and
yours had already left. But now that I learn that he was a magician, I
see how fortunate I was that my cousin had no need of your special
services and that my tardiness allowed you to corral the man before me
and mine stumbled upon him. I really cannot wait to hear more of your
adventures, but it may be best to wait until we arrive back at camp so
you can relay it to all, particularly Proctor Veldorme."
The name seemed familiar. A moments thought found him in a cesspool of
memories from her days as a student at the Academy of Demonology. The man
held pride of place in the horrors of those times and, despite her recent
detachment from past hurts, she instinctively reacted as if he was her
hobgoblin, rather than the prior occupant's, she squeaked, "Proctor
Veldorme?"
"Aye, he and his coterie arrived just after you left. I am sure that he,
if my cousin can spare you further, will be interest to hear how you
defeated the Hermit Lord."
Suddenly she realized that she was in no better shape to match wits with
this urbane lord than was her captain. She did not understand enough to
know why he would have conjured this spectre of her past. Furthermore,
trying to navigate memories of the murky political world in which she
found herself, caused her head to throb more deeply, bringing a hiss of
pain to her lips.
Hearing this, the duke, falsely solicitous, said, "Lady Feraleen, your
captain did not tell me you were hurt."
"Not hurt, Duke Tormaer. Only exhausted from my battle, which has left me
with a head in which our army's smiths seem to have taken up residence."
"And here am I engaging you in mindless banter. For shame. Harlan, where
is Harlan, to me man, the Lady Feraleen is ill and has need of your
services. Fear not Lady, we will soon have you in greater comfort than
this humble litter can offer."
True to his promise, the Duke's personal doctor soon took her in hand.
Feeding her a drink, with a bitter taste she recognized as the extract
from the root of the doa plant, he then had her carried from her litter
to a sumptuous cart. Pulled by four horses, its accompanying the duke
showed that his tardiness could in part be explained away by better
preparation than Feraleen's. Inside, alone with the rather small Harlan,
she began to relax as his fingers pressed to her face and skull,
relieving even more pressure. Wishing the man had been available for her
prior rebirths, she found herself able to evaluate her situation.
She did not like what she found.
Through the years she had discovered that though each possession was
different, there were similarities. In particular, she had always been
male and, more often than not, one with power. Now she was female,
stereotypically female, and owned less power than she had assumed, little
more than the horses the prince also rode. Never had she been anybody
like Feraleen of Goscaire.
Now with time to explore, she delved deeper into what she had brushed
against in her rush to possess. She relived the moment of pride when, as
a teen-ager, she had been granted entry into the Academy. How that pride
was crushed when a schoolmate's necklace was found, somehow planted deep
within her personal chest. The deal that followed, private dishonour in
place of public ruination, as she offered her nubile body to Proctor
Veldorme in return for making the accusations of theft disappear. The
years as his apprentice, study often interrupted to satisfy whatever
perversions the man dreamed up. In the end she had been so ready to be
free of him that she had willingly accepted the gifting that had placed
her between Learic's sheets, uncaring what favours the man bought with
her body or that her ordeal had resulted in the public humiliation she
had once sought to deny. Eagerly did she accept the title Whore of
Goscaire, if it meant no longer being Veldorme's toy.
Further soul searching led to understanding that her pursuit of the
Hermit Lord had been an act of rebellion. An attempt to prove that she
could do more than slake the deep thirsts of Learic. Now having
accomplished that goal, she worried what would be the result. For a
moment she thought it may have been better to have been caught by Duke
Blaise, but then realized the duke may not have triggered her desire to
continue with life. And was it not better to be alive in chains than free
in death?
She hoped the answer would continue to be yes.
***
By the time they reached the army`s camp, early the next morning, her
headache was gone and she had fully became Feraleen of Goscaire.
Completely entwined were their destinies. At least they would be, once
she determined what those were to be. Much would depend on the reactions
to her return.
Inside her sumptuous tent she met the first judge. Aliena Koehl,
Feraleen's supposed maid-servant, in actuality the proctor's warden, ever
since Feraleen had come under the man's sway. During that time the woman
had been the mistress of the petty indignities of Feraleen's life, while
Veldorme contented himself as the master of the gross. Judgment came
quickly as the maid met Feraleen with a slap to the face, calculated
perfectly not to mark, and said, "Stupid girl. What possessed you to run
off, forsaking your duty, to play the heroine? Surely Prince Learic was
filled with rage at your abandonment, you will be fortunate not to end up
back in the Master's household."
Guessing that it was not the old maid she needed to please, Feraleen
saved her energy, accepting the admonishment with bowed head and
meekness. Watching her, to see if she would need to quash protest, Aliena
finally nodded in satisfaction and clapped her hands, summoning her
assistants, Dinine and Solange.
"Hurry girls, we must prepare Lady Feraleen for this afternoon's council
session."
What followed was a whirlwind in which Feraleen served little purpose
other than to be the focal point of their activity. Stripping her of the
riding habit, she was helped into a steaming bath, which had been waiting
her arrival. After the removal of the road grime, she laid upon a table
to receive a massage with aromatic oils, leaving her skin glistening with
health. Something that would be apparent to all, after she was dressed in
three golden, silk scarfs, barely wider than her hand. Two attached to a
silken rope, tied around her waist to form the most inadequate of skirts.
The third looped around he neck and crossed her torso, straining over
breasts, nipples puckering the thin material, before being knotted at her
back.
The simplicity of her garments were offset by the decorations that
followed. Toes, fingers, and lips painted red to match her fiery mane,
gathered into a long, thick tail, held in check by seven golden rings,
through which a man's fist could pass, and matching those that hung from
each ear. Her eyes, darkened with kohl, shone forth like the emeralds at
her forehead, dangling from the ring in her navel, and glistening at the
end of the stud through her tongue. Looking at herself in a sheet of
polished brass, Feraleen could only stare. How different she appeared
than only the day before. Then she had sought to make herself a
sacrifice, now she appeared as one. And once again, she would be forced
enter the command tent as a bare-footed supplicant.
Stepping forth from her tent, Feraleen was reminded of an old adage,
imparted by one of her first instructors in Dissidel, 'Knowing something,
believing in something, does not make it real. Living it does.' The
lesson had been meant to temper a young man's belief that reading
something meant he understood; however, she had found its truth many
times, a person's memories meant little until she lived them. For
example, despite knowing she was female, dramatically so, she did not
begin to understand what that meant until she left the safety of her
tent.
Like a pack of wolves, spotting a wounded deer, each man's heads swiveled
in her direction. Goose bumps forming beneath the weight of their
combined leers, she quickened her pace, scurrying along the street
towards the central square and the command tent. Those stares offered
further proof, not that anymore was needed, of her status. Such gawking
would never be allowed if she was seen as anything other than a
repository for their general's lust.
Arriving, Feraleen was greeted by Learic's smug major domo who asked her
to bide until the prince could see her. There, under the appreciative
watch of the tent's guardsmen, it finally dawned upon her as to what she
was meant to do the tent. She was to give herself to Learic, to do with
as he may, and if he did not have the imagination of the proctor,
memories warned great enthusiasm, which she had often matched her with
own. Recognizing this, a battle exploded in her mind, as parts, holding
memories of identities who had taken the most pride in their masculinity,
triggered disgust at the idea. In turn, those that had belonged to the
prior Feraleen, tried to deny the feelings of shame from this self-
judgment, protesting why she found Learic desirable.
For the Feraleen, who had once been Fruderick Vontonel, the argument was
little more than background noise. With most new lives, she had often
experienced act that seemed unnatural to her composite beliefs. Some had
been benign, such as the fasting required as the Hermit Lord, while
others had been horrible enough to start wars and dwarfed, in darkness,
the idea of opening her legs or lips for a man. Each time Feraleen had
accepted it, just as she would not accept it this time, while hoping that
remembered pleasures would continue.
However, during that afternoon she was not given a chance to find out,
for she was never called into the tent, though any men, officers or
messengers, entered or exited during the time she stood on display. And
while each took notice of her, their expressions running from lust to
disdain, the smirking major domo never again looked her way. Not even
when the meeting broke up did she see Learic, his own quarters being
joined to the back.
Back at the tent, Aliena Koehl took great delight in hearing what had
happened, casting dire prediction upon dire prediction about what it
meant for Feraleen. Working herself into a cackling frenzy, worthy of the
mad Oracles of Costagar, it did not take long before she had her supposed
mistress living as a disease plagued whore, on the streets of the
capital. But Aliena could have saved her breath, little of her ravings
penetrated the mind of her target, who instead focussed upon the
immediate affect of the afternoon's punishment, the agony of sunburn.
Lovely as her fair skin had appeared, glistening in bold display,
Feraleen's lengthy stay under the sun's brightness had left her skin
competing with the redness of her hair. Every time she brushed anything,
even the silken and satin pillows that filled her tent, it brought a hiss
of pain to her lips. She could not sit or lay down, yet the result of
standing the entire afternoon, posed as was expected of her, left legs
begging for relief. Still continuing to stand was preferable, given that
her sweat, natural in the warm, stuffiness of the tent, seemed to bead in
the inside of her elbows, between toes, at the back of her knees, and in
the creases of her neck causing every movement to feel like sand rubbing
against her sensitive skin. And despite owning knowledge and skills that
had caused the world to shake, she knew nothing to help her now, having
never studied the arts of healing or becoming one who had. She was
helpless before this simple foe. She needed help.
So interrupting her very own Priestess of Doom, she asked, "Aliena, could
you send for a healer? This sunburn is unbearable."
"Send for a healer? Don't be ridiculous girl, you will never learn your
lesson if you so easily discard the punishment."
"Do it."
Feraleen's command, through gritted teeth, caused Aliena's head to snap
around in surprise. Eyes blazing, she moved toward her charge, and with a
familiar slap, she said, "What was that, you slut? Do you think to give
me commands? You don't give me commands, you follow mine."
Such an attack would have, had in fact, cowed the Feraleen of the past.
But she was no longer the same person and she had decided she had enough.
So her slap was not calculated to only sting, instead it slashed against
her tormentor's face with full power, causing the older woman to crash
down to the ground, a bruise already growing on her cheek.
In shock, her hand reaching up to touch her cheek, Aliena looked up at
her attacker. Pain, dampening anger, she said, "Whore, you forget
yourself. Master Veldorme will hear of this and you will wish that...what
are you doing?"
Feraleen did not answer, knowing the woman would not like anything she
had to say. Besides, she did not think it necessary to say how she was
tired of being afraid or that, though she did not have the power to
change her situation with many people, she did have it over the maid. Nor
did she feel it important to ease the woman's fears. No, it would be
better to just to act, so with the power Feraleen had always owned, but
with knowledge newly added, she cast her spell.
This situation did not call for an erentian, so rather than lava, the
carpets buckled up, the sod beneath flowing overtop to disgorge a manlike
figure, a wine cup in hand. Black bearded, horns sticking through its
hair, legs of a goat, and with a tuffed tail, it wore no clothes.
Something that became obvious when it spotted Feraleen, attired in
nothing more than her reddened skin. Immediately its look of confusion
was replaced by a nasty leer and its, or better to say his, manhood
engorged to obscenely jut forth, drawing both women's eyes. Aliena gasped
with horror, but Feraleen only smiled. The satyr exceeded her
expectations, the fact that he would be clever enough to understand human
speech, unlike the erentian killing machines, made it even better. After
all, if Aliena could not understand what was spoken, how would she
understand the threat Feraleen planned to make?
"What is your name, Satyr."
"What does Pretty want of Egilo?"
However, clever they may be, satyrs were far from smart. Ruled by their
vices, they readily believed lies offered to them. "Greetings, Egilo, I
called you here for my maid. She was just bemoaning the fact that she had
never been had by one of your kind."
"What?" Shrieked Aliena, all her normal calm shattered.
Egilo, in turn, looked between the maid on the ground and Feraleen,
before answering. "Egilo don't want old one, want Pretty, with skin like
succubus."
Feraleen smacked his reaching hand away, pointed at Aliena, who had begun
crawling to the door. "Stay there, you old prune, or you will regret it."
Again looking towards the satyr, she said, "I am too much for you to
handle, Egilo. If I were to take you, the pleasure would be so great that
your pride would wilt and fall off."
Nervously looking down at his now, slightly drooping member, he puffed up
his chest, and stated, "Egilo can handle you."
"But that is not why you were summoned, so if Egilo is not interested in
my offer, then beg..."
"Wait, wait, Pretty. Egilo want old one."
"Feraleen! No!"
"So old one, you no longer want Egilo?"
"Feraleen, please no. I will do anything?"
"Would you get a healer?"
"Yes, yes, of course. Please, Feraleen, please?"
"Egilo not understand. Can he take old one now?"
"It is too late Egilo. The old one was insulted that you did not want her
first and so no longer wants you."
"Me not hear her say that."
"Of course not, she spoke in the language of woman. You could only hear
it if you were to become one of us, is that what you wish?"
"No, no, no. But I see you only joke, like Egilo joked that he did not
want the beautiful maid. Of course he wants her more than red skinned
woman. No, no, no. Who could look upon her and not want her? Just look at
how her grey hair dankly flows down past wrinkled neck almost reaching
proudly drooping breasts. I must have her."
"A noble apology Egilo. Still Aliena is not yet ready to forgive, but do
not give up hope, she may still change her mind. In fact if she ever
mentions meeting you to anybody else, that will be a sign that she has
fully forgiven you. If I were you, I would watch for such an occasion and
take her immediately before she changes her mind again."
"Egilo can do that. But not now?"
"No not now, but wait. I see you carry a mug, is it full?"
Surprised by this question, the satyr looked into the mug. Frowning at
what he saw, he tipped it over, and sadly shook his head. Snapping her
fingers, in response to this, she said, "Aliena, some wine for your
guest. Now please."
Nervously, face flickering from face to groin, Aliena approached the
grinning satyr, bearing a skin of wine, which Feraleen's distraction had
kept her from drinking. Filling the mug, she stood, watching in disgust
as it was greedily emptied, wine running into beard, before it was thrust
forward again. Again she filled it and again Egilo drank it dry. But the
third time, Feraleen stopped him before he could drink.
"Remember what I told you Egilo, now begone."
Disappearing faster than he had arrived, caused Aliena to slump. Turning
accusatory eyes to Feraleen, she asked, "He won't really be watching,
will he?"
Feraleen just smiled and said, "Hurry along now, Aliena, and get me a
healer. Although a word to the wise, I would not scurry off to tell tales
to Proctor Veldorme if I were you."
With one last, fearful gaze the maid scurried from the tent. Whether it
was to get a healer or seek vengeance, Feraleen did not know. Though for
both their sakes, she hoped it was the former. For with the fury, she
felt during both the encounter with Aliena and Egilo, gone, she now felt
the pain of her burn more deeply. Though that pain was nothing to what
her former tormentor would feel if she spoke of what had just happened,
for Egilo would be watching, he would watch until the old maid took her
final breath. And if given the chance, he would eagerly take what he
considered his.
As the wait grew longer, she began to think Aliena had tempted fate after
all. And so began wondering what it would mean for her and feeling
frustrated that since she had been approached by the previous incarnation
of Feraleen she had been reacting blindly to everything around her. It
was an unwise approach, so unlike her usual methodic approach, which
required her to learn as much as possible about a person, before taking
over their life. So easy, now, to misstep when all she had to work with
were her instincts, but on this, her second eve, they served her well.
For when the tent flaps opened next, it was to allow entry of a
apologetic Aliena, who explained away her delay and introduced the
Brother of Leyrl who accompanied her.
Like his brothers and sisters, he would be a wandering monk dedicated to
the worship of the Goddess Leyrl. Normally he would find himself moving
between small villages and farms, offering his Goddess' healing to those
who had nobody else. But his kind also seemed drawn to war, and Feraleen
knew his skills would probably serve her better than one of the great
sorcerer mages.
Apparently he had been briefed by Aliena, as he hardly looked at Feraleen
before spilling out ten flat, white rocks from his pouch and ordering the
maid to fetch him a pail of water. Having his patient turn her back to
him, he took a stone in each hand, knelt down, pressing the rock to the
back of each of her knees and began to sing a song, seemingly without
lyrics. Together, the stones and music, worked to draw the heat from her
skin, before dropping the two stones into the pail in a burst of steam.
Taking another two rocks, he repeated his actions on her ankles, then the
crease between her buttocks and thighs, and so on until he had drawn the
heat from her back side. Finally able to get off her feet, she followed
his command to lay upon her back so he could work on her front. Nor was
she disturbed by how intimate were his touches, for his actions brought
more relief than the most caring of lovers. And when he eased sore legs,
with a wonderful massage, she doubted a single one of her voices would
complain if she took the Brother as such.
But that was not possible for either of them. Instead Feraleen paid him
with a meal and a bolt of white cotton, which would serve him and his
fellows well the next time the army found itself in battle. Delighting in
the freedom from pain, she ensured Aliena kept the man's plate and cups
full as he attempted to defeat a seemingly bottomless hunger. Only when
his pace slowed, did she ask, "Excuse me, Learned Sir, is there a way to
prevent sunburn?"
Not looking up from his plate, he said, "Stay out of the sun or wear more
clothes."
Losing many of her positive feelings towards the man, at this obvious
piece of advice, she held her temper and said, "Sometimes that is not
possible."
"Oh right, like this afternoon."
With those words, Feraleen knew how quickly her humiliation had spread,
despite futile hopes it would not be worthwhile gossip. "Yes like this
afternoon. Tomorrow may prove no different."
"I suppose coating yourself in mud is not an option?"
"Of course not!"
"Umm, I smelt lavender oil, if you wear that, you could crush some
dolantine berries in it, that would be good. That is if dolantine berries
were readily available in these climates. Therefore, I would recommend
fox aloe, crush a handful of leaves and add the resulting paste to the
oil. That may work, if not I will stop by tomorrow night to see if you
need my assistance again. Now I must be off to see who else needs my
assistance before I seek my bed."
"Thank you, Learned Sir. Be well."
***
As she expected, Feraleen was given a chance to learn that the fox aloe
did indeed help, requiring only short work by Brother Brien, during his
nightly visits, to have her skin back to its creamy norm. The next day to
go forth again, barely dressed, coated in oil, and bade to wait on
Learic's pleasure. And each day, the summons did not came.
By the end of the third afternoon, her fear of what may come had begun to
dwindle. She found it difficult to fear someone, rich in power, who would
devise such a feeble punishment. Nervousness, gave way to curiosity about
the prince. with he massive army, did not move to finish his foe.
Interest perked, Feraleen began seeking knowledge about those who
surrounded her. One source was the discussions amongst the officers who,
like her, often waited to enter the command meetings, particularly as
they grew used to her presence and became less careful with what they
said. Their information was supplemented by the gossip of her maids and
Brother Brien, during his nightly visits. She learned enough to give her
an outline of the situation.
However, she needed to find the details herself. This she accomplished
via the use of tjeets, summoned in the night while she was alone. Tiny
demons, no bigger than her longest finger, they needed to be smarter than
their larger brethren in order to survive. This intelligence, along with
their ability to hide, made them the perfect spies. Not only to listen to
conversations thought private, but even to read letters and missives,
allowing them to weasel out most information she sought.
What Feraleen discovered led her to realized the army existed for no
other reason than to gather the Empire's troublemakers and potential
troublemakers into an easily controlled group, while also expanding the
borders. Worse, the entire army understood this, including their supposed
leader, Learic, the empire's top potential troublemaker. Thus they did
not make for an idea invasion force, instead they moved only when the
pillaging needed for their massive camp drained the surrounding
countryside of all resources. And because of their size they always won;
however, it was never with elegance, instead brute and bloody force
brought victory. Often their casualties were as bad as their enemy,
requiring the Empire to find more problem children to replace any losses.
Morale was always low, leaving the army being better described as a mob.
The Hermit Lord had made a terrible mistake to give in without fighting,
it would have been interesting trying to stamp out this scourge of
locusts.
It was hard to believe that this band of buffoons controlled her fate,
but she could not easily take someone else's place. During, or even
after, her current punishment, it would be impossible to arrange a
private meeting with anybody other than the prince. Even if she could,
her resultant death would make for an uncomfortable reception for her new
self. Besides she did not see a worthy candidate, even Learic held less
power than everyone pretended.
So for the moment she accepted the context of her situation. Trapped in
her silken prison, she fought boredom by participating in the creation of
the silly outfits she wore. Her unique past, as the recipient of the
pleasures provided by those like she had become, offering a different
viewpoint.
Nearly two weeks after becoming Feraleen, while wearing one of her own
designs, a barbarian slave girl look consisting of three triangles of
rabbit fur and leather thongs, something finally happened. Again she
found herself waiting upon Learic's pleasure, trying to ignore the
invasive nature of her costume's bottom, when she saw a company of
Imperial Guard approaching with their commander, Blaise Tormaer. Having
learned, through her tjeets, that the duke was the true commander of the
army, granting Learic only figure-head status, she found it strange for
the council to be meeting without his presence. Spotting a familiar face,
from her Hermit Lord past, riding beside the emperor's man, she guessed
why he was only now arriving.
Pilar Graneet was the perfect choice to represent Validurm, now that her
old self was dead. Having used his wealth to buy into old nobility, Pilar
had disagreed vehemently with fighting the empire's forces, unsurprising
since his businesses were based upon exports to Goscaire. He probably had
been clamouring even louder for surrender after their lord's death, in
fact she was surprised it had taken this long for him to get his way.
However, before guiding the man the final steps to his glorious
surrender, Duke Tormaer steered him towards Feraleen. "Sir Graneet, allow
me to introduce you to Lady Feraleen, the Prince's companion. It was she
who defeated your Hermit Lord in sorcerous combat."
Taken aback by her brazen appearance, he momentarily was tongue-tied by
the lust of a man married to a homely wife who he feared. And Graneet
lived under no illusions that if he were to stray, his would divorce him
immediately and rob him of the title and status for which he had paid so
much. Yet he quickly regained his aplomb, his riches having come from the
dexterity of his temporarily tied tongue. Offering her a short bow, he
said, "Lady, what a great gift you have given the people of Validurm by
ridding us of that senile old fool. He would have led us all to our
doom."
The very sound of his voice, little alone what he said, reminded her why
she had always despised Pilar. Yet it was now too late, and too early, to
do anything about it, instead she only offered the man a full, court
curtsey, rather mocking in her state of undress, and said, "Sir Graneet,
it pleases me to know that you and your people also benefit from the gift
I sought to offer His Highness, the Prince Learic."
Foolish, but not a fool, he caught something in her tone and looked
questioningly at Duke Tormaer, watching with a smile on his lips and a
frown in his eyes. Decided not to rise to her bait, he said, "It was a
gift for all, Lady Feraleen. But please excuse us for the moment, as Sir
Graneet is about to finalize the delivery of your gift. I am sure someone
will let you know how His Highness receives it."
Even with the reminder of her status, Feraleen smiled at being allowed a
subtle strike. It made her wish for more, so while the surrender occurred
inside the tent, she found herself plotting revenge upon Pilar,
considering seducing him and letting his harpy wife deal with the man.
But it was only fantasy, she could not stand the idea of his touching
her. Not because he was a man, that hurdle grew lower every day with
disgust being replaced by curiosity and a competitive urge to prove to
Learic what he was missing. No she would not let Pilar touch her, because
he was a hideous slug.
The two men were not in the tent long enough, particularly to surrender a
nation, before exiting. This time ignoring her, they mounted their
waiting horses and returned in the direction from which they had come.
Watching them leave, she did not sense the approach of another man, his
satin smooth voice surprising her.
"I thought I would save your tjeets the work and let you know that Duke
Tormaer has been made Governor of Validurm, at least until the Emperor
finds a suitable replacement for the prize you dropped in his lap."
Spinning, she saw Proctor Veldorme. Younger and better looking than the
bogeyman of the same name, who resided in her head, Feraleen hid her
surprise at his knowledge and silent approach with a quick dip, holding
none of the mockery in the one she had offered Pilar Graneet. "Proctor
Veldorme, I do not know what you mean by sheets."
"Tjeets my pupil. Tiny demons, wonderful at sneaking about and gathering
information. I spotted one a couple days ago and set about discovering
who was its master. Imagine my surprise when I learned it was yours."
"But Proctor, that is not possible, you never taught me about these tjeet
things. How could it be mine?"
"Such were my thought as well, my lovely Feraleen. Yet everything I
learned pointed in your direction and makes me ask what truly happened
between yourself and the Hermit Lord?
"We battled, he defending and I attacking. Honestly, I was lucky to win,
for the Hermit Lord had my erentian under his control, I think to prove
he was stronger. Proctor, he let me win, he decided to sacrifice himself
for his people."
"Yet you now have the ability to call upon tjeets, something that not a
single member of my coterie, all of who received instruction you were
denied, can do. You walk with confidence, even in garb you abhor and
while under threat of punishment greater than being put on display. You
do not shrink away from me, and when was the last time I could approach
you without your knowing, your lovely skin goose bumping by my very
nearness. What did you encounter that day, which changed you so?"
She was unsurprised that he saw a difference, it was always most
difficult to fool those who were closest to those she became. The
questions always were, how much did they see? How perceptive were they?
Doubtless the devious proctor was amongst the toughest audiences to which
she would ever play, in many ways being Feraleen's creator. Yet he should
never guess what had happened, because her truth would be something he
would not consider possible. Still he could make life difficult, so she
needed to plan how best to deal with him. Two options came to mind,
either confrontation, which would allow her to shed her feeble shell for
one more powerful, or she could give in, at least for now, to her current
situation. Recognizing that it was base emotions which clamoured for the
first approach, she chose the second.
Bowing her head, before his gaze, Feraleen said, "Forgive me Master
Veldorme, I have forgotten my place."
Staring hard at her, he finally nodded. "Very well, let us pretend that
is the truth, at least for now. Though I warn you, that when I return, I
shall delve deeper."
"Do you go with Duke Tormaer, Proctor Veldorme?"
"No, to Goscaire. Until the Duke returns from Validurm, there will be no
progress in Samendolia. I will return when he does."
"May you have a good journey."
"Why thank you for such pleasantries, my dear Feraleen. With such care
for my well-being, maybe it is time for me to quit sharing you with the
whelp. Think on that whilst I am away."
Gladly she let him have the last word, no matter what it may portend for
her. Instead she savoured the possibilities that existed with the two men
she feared the most gone from the camp, the two who she knew had
encouraged Learic to keep her at arms length. Just as she knew that the
prince had not found another to drive her scent away from his furs, she
guessed that it would not be long before her banishment came to an end.
"Lady Feraleen, the Prince will see you now."
Learic was even more eager than expected, hardly gone were his watchers
and he already giving in to his desires. Ignoring the return of respect,
in the major domo's face, she conjured up memories of the woman on whom
she had based her costume. Feraleen could only hope that she could wield
as much influence over Learic, as had the sensuous Ilsi wielded over
Chieftan Bron, her own self at the time. With the long dead temptress as
a role model, she strutted into the tent and prostrated herself before
the prince, though not the full genuflection offered to the Emperor.
Rather than being flat on her stomach, she had curled forward up her
knees, forehead touch the ground and offering the officers behind her a
view that would enliven any war council. She held that position, waiting
for her target to react.
"Leave us. The council is finished for today."
During the shuffling noise of the tent emptying, Feraleen remained in her
position. Nor did she move when the only sound was that of breathing,
deeper than normal from in front of her. Beginning to stiffen, she
decided to break the almost silence. "Milord, may I approach?"
A moment's hesitation caused her worry, but then she heard a sigh and he
said, "Of course."
Only with these words did she raise her head and look at him. Scarcely
older than her body, neither having reached their twentieth birthday, he
was almost pretty, though his warrior's build mitigated the possibility
that anybody would tell him so. Not shrinking from her gaze, he responded
with a look that combined a mixture of confusion, hurt, and lust. Though
as she moved forward, still on hands and knees, stalking rather than
subservient, the lust ascended over its fellows.
Approaching him, she saw proof of his desires rising within white, cotton
trousers. Discarding who she may have once been, accepting the now, she
reached out to caress, first just feeling the heat, then what caused it.
As it twitched upward to meet her palm, she guessed how hard abstinence
had been for him, having never lacked feminine company from the moment he
had first desired it. Sensing Learic`s eagerness, she allowed her second
hand to slide under the hem of his tunic, to find and loosen the cord at
his waist. Understanding her goal, he added his assistance, and between
them they soon had his trousers down to his ankles, which he then kicked
away. Unhesitating she brushed back his tunic and leaned forward, her
pierced tongue running along his length, chasing it, when it jerked away
despite the pleasure, to take the head into her mouth. Already she could
tell he was ready and knowing that sometimes it was best to release the
pressure, she bobbed downwards, pushing him over the ledge. Swallowing
she did not let go, instead she readied him for something better for both
of them. It did not take long.
Pulling out, he reached down and scooped her up, hurrying towards his
quarters, goaded on by her moaned encouragements. Kneeling on pillows and
furs, Learic dropped her to sprawl before him, arms and legs open in
surrender. Like the finest of swordsmen, he moved quickly to exploit the
opportunity offered, her costume offering no protection. He took what she
offered and offered what she took.
Mutually satisfied, he finally collapsed, one of Feraleen's legs still
wrapped around him, the other, hooked over his shoulder, trapped along
with the rest of her between her lover and the pillows. Momentarily they
lay together, panting from the exertion mirrored in their sweat slicked
bodies, trying to regain self, to become two instead of one. Her grip
relaxed, he gathered a modicum of energy to roll onto his side, propped
upon an elbow looking down at her with a tumultuous mix of emotions.
Satisfaction and lust definitely, even a tinge of love, but there was
also anger, bitterness, frustration, nervousness, and hurt. Once, then
twice he began to speak, but stopped himself, regathering his thoughts.
Settling upon the simple truth, he said, "You should not have been
punished."
The blunt statement surprised her. "Why was I?"
"Because I am not strong enough to deny Blaise and because he sees
initiative as a bad thing amongst those of us banished to this army."
In the warm glow of what they had just experienced together, Feraleen
found herself pleased to find that Learic held no delusions about his own
situation. "It that why he off to Validurm, himself? To deny us our
victory?"
"Your victory. But yes, you read the situation right. Neither Blaise,
nor, for that matter, my father, would like us to acquire a taste for
easy victory."
"Is that why they handicapped you with such poor troops?"
"Ehh? No actually they aren't too bad, no different than what we have
been facing. Some in fact are quite a bit better. The problem is with how
poorly Blaise, and I guess myself, have led them. Attacking fortified
positions, letting enemy forces link together, never utilizing our
numerical superiority with any wisdom."
"But why?" Feraleen asked. Knowing the answer, but curious to see if he
did as well.
"To prove me incompetent. To make it so nobody would flock to my banner
if I raised it in rebellion against father or Danaric, once he becomes
Emperor."
"Because even this is less costly than civil war."
"Yes. Plus, no matter how incompetently, we are expanding the Empire's
borders. They cannot help but win."
For a moment the two lay in thought. Learic, thinking of what he had
finally admitted aloud, distractedly playing the ring in his pillow
mate's navel. While Feraleen, unconcerned by the possessiveness of his
touch, found herself re-evaluating the prince, wondering if he was worthy
of being her ally and, if so, for what purpose would their alliance
exist. She felt it was worth exploring.
"What can be done so that you too, in fact all of us, can share in their
victories?"
Snorting a bitter laugh, he said, "I supposed we could prove we are not
incompetent."
"With Duke Tormaer away, wouldn't now be a good time to do so?"
"Sure, though that would place us even deeper under watch by my father
and his real army. Still, it would almost be worth it, better to be
punished than be remembered as the idiot prince. But will anyone follow
me?"
Steadily Feraleen grew more convinced that Learic would serve her better
as a stalking horse than as a host. As her current self, to which she had
become adjusted, she would have almost as much to gain from his success
as he would have. More importantly, punishment for her, if they failed,
would probably not be as harsh. So she nudged him in her desired
direction. "I will, Your Highness."
That he did not break out in laughter or even a smile, raised him even
higher in her opinion, as did his cautious response. "It is easy to
forget that you were a student of Proctor Veldorme. Harder now after you
cornered the Hermit Lord. But I must ask, what more assistance can you
provide me?"
His wise question deserved the truth and she almost gave it to him. "I
can offer you this, a willing bedmate and ear. Morseo, I can offer you
information."
"What do you mean? What do you know?"
"No, Your Highness, the question is what can I learn." Seeing his
confusion, she said, "To understand what I am about to say, you must
first understand that I did not defeat the Hermit Lord, he let me win.
Yet before he bared his throat, he first opened his mind to me. His
knowledge was overwhelming, much I do not even begin to remember, but
some of it made sense and while I was banished from your side, I began to
explore that which did. Of particular use is having tiny demons, called
tjeets, spy for me."
"Truly?"
"Truly."
"And what did you learn of the Samendolians that I can use?"
"Umm, I did not think to check on those enemies."
"Oh?" Then realizing which enemies she meant, he said, "Oh! How very
interesting."
"Aye, Milord. The tales I have to tell. Are you curious?"
"Most definitely, but that can wait."
"Milord?"
"I think I am ready for more of what you first offered."
Quickly understanding what he meant, she was surprise how ready she was
as well, the chaste and pure life of the hermit had not been for her.
Smiling, Feraleen rolled over onto her stomach, wiggled her delightful
rump, saying. "Your barbarian slave girl is ready when you are, Milord."
In the tradition of the best of authors, Learic showed her when, rather
than telling her.
***
During the next couple of days, the two spent much of their time in
Learic's tent, seen only by their servants. And though most admired his
stamina, it did little to change their opinions of the prince's ability
to command the army. However, what he and Feraleen learned over that
period, while they waited for Duke Tormaer and Proctor Veldorme to get
well on their ways, changed his opinions on many of them. He discovered
who pretended to be his friends and those who could care less about who
led them, just as long as they were led somewhere. Furthermore, they
surmised who was competent or useless, loyal or disloyal, brave or
cowardly, and many other secrets that could be used in their favour.
And not just amongst their own army. Though it proved impossible to slip
her little friends into the tents of Semendolian's commanders, whose own
magic users saw them well protected, there are many ways to discover
intelligence about an opponent's army; overhearing conversations,
counting numbers of troops, collecting information on supplies, and
reading missives being delivered by messengers. It was enough to give a
competent planner all he needed. The prince, despite his other faults,
had paid enough attention to his tutors to be this.
Not that they were entirely devoted to their scheming, the rumours that
were circulating held some truth. For conspiracy is a glee inducing
activity, much more so when at the slightest inclination you can pounce
upon your fellow conspirator and have your way with her or him.
On the fourth night they were ready to put their plan in motion. The
initial step being to invite five of the army's commanders, those who
chafed the most under the current inactivity and yet were not complete
idiots, to a supper hosted by Prince Learic. The first to arrive was
Senior Colonel Grannar Vorqsin, commander of the 4th Pikes Division,
whose lowly birth had caught up to his competence, earning he and his men
banishment to this army. He had the most to gain and the least to lose in
attaching himself to Learic. Not the case for the next arrival, whose
family's wealth allowed Viscount Kelix Fenslowe too bring a full regiment
of household troops. Still, despite being unable to learn which
embarrassment to his family had brought him to their midst, they figured
he would happily seek a success, allowing him to return to the family
embrace. The third invitee was one of the few women of power in the army,
an actual volunteer, Druidess Menalle Ginfalclin was the mistress of a
new school of nature and illusion magic and hoped her exploits would
bring it acclaim, sponsorship, and wealthy students. Then there was old
Baron Nilcos Wenron, unwilling to listen to the subtle hints to retire
from his post as the Empire's siege-master, shunted aside to Learic's
army. Finally General Anton Jiacyl arrived, once the Warden of the
Empire's Eastern Armies, he had since run afoul of Arch-Duke Dorthon.
Currently the Commander of Horse in Learic's army and the most respected
voice in of the daily council. Any success they were to achieve would
depend heavily upon his buy in.
Feraleen, acting as Learic's hostess, greeted each of them while wearing
a pale blue, silk halter and a matching skirt, fastened at her left hip,
by a blue enamel pin and left most of her leg bare. Titian hair piled
high atop her head and her slender neck bearing a wide, pale blue, satin
choker, decorated in chains of aquamarine beads, she guided each to a
cushion around a low table, saw that they all had drinks. Then folding
down into a kneel, at the head of the table beside Learic, she clapped
her hands to summon the servers.
The conversation during the meal was low key, none being close friends
and all being unsure as to the reasons for their invite. The talk was of
the meal, the weather, gossip from Goscaire, but nothing of their purpose
in Samendolia. By the time they finished their final course, a pastry of
nuts and honey, conversation had almost stopped.
Taking a sip of his wine, Learic looked from guest to guest, before
standing and saying, "Ladies and gentlemen, would you please follow me."
Sharing questioning glances, each rose to his or her feet, Baron Wenron
receiving a hand from Vorqsin to his right. They followed him into the
chamber where they met for meaningless sessions each afternoon, where
Feraleen guided each to a spot circling a cow's hide, staked to the
ground, upon which a map of Samendolia was painted. Everyone in place,
Learic said, "You are probably wondering why I invited you to supper
tonight. It is to apprise each of you as to what I see as your roles in
finishing our conquest of Samendolia."
Each looked at him in surprise, Viscount Fenslowe blurting out. "But,
Your Highness, Duke Tormaer told us to wait until his return before
acting."
"I am aware of that, Viscount, we are all aware of that. No doubt even
the Samendolians are aware of it, given how porous our camp is."
"Which makes it a perfect time to act. Is that your thinking, Your
Highness?" General Jiacyl asked.
"Yes General, that is my intention. Now you will all agree that we have
the forces to crush them if we but try?"
General Jiacyl answered, "Their camp is well dug in, but we have the
numbers to break it. Though it would hurt."
"Which is why I would like to get some of them out of that camp. So I
propose that Baron Wenron march his siege train for King Guronde's
capital at Clatand, under the protection of a force commanded the
Viscount."
"That's what I've been saying we should be doing all along."
Ignoring the siege-master's interruption, he continued. "However, the
real goal of this force will be to draw troops from their camp, after
what they will hopefully see it as a target. Particularly since the
Viscount's protective force will be woefully inadequate."
"Excuse me, Your Highness, General Kilsnaft will know its a trap, he's no
fool."
"But I am, General?"
"Your Highness, in no way did I mean to imply that." General Jiacyl
protested.
"Worry not, General, in this I am quite happy to be seen as a fool. After
all, who but a fool would also send his most able commander, along with
the majority of his cavalry, to raid Indigelle while he has an
undermanned siege train on the move?"
"They'll see that ruse?"
"But it will not be